Now press your finger down on your lower lip.
Notice that there is an absence of feeling. Your lower lip is
deficient in pressure-sensitive nerves.

Try an inverse
experiment. Run your finger lightly on the inside of your
cheek. Notice the lack of feeling. This surface is devoid of
touch-sensitive nerves. However, if you push your finger hard
against your inner cheek, you can feel that it does contain
pressure-sensitive nerves.

PART 1:Pleasure from
touch-sensitive
nerves in the ridged band,
inner
foreskin, & frenulum

The inner foreskin,

ridged band
of the foreskin,

and

frenulum
of the foreskin

abound with
touch
sensitive nerves.

20,000-70,000touch-sensitive nerves,
in fact,
of a type called Meissner's corpuscles,
which are excited by gentle
touching.

To get an idea of the difference between
skin that is teeming with Meissner's corpuscles and skin that is
not, stroke your fingernail across the back of your hand. Then
compare that feeling to the sensation elicited by stroking the palm
of your hand. That rather ticklish sensation is generated by the
large numbers of Meissner's corpuscles found in your palm. scroll >

Photo below is a close up of the ridged
band of the foreskin.

Clusters of Meissner's corpuscles are
found in crests of the ridged band.

The photo
on the right is a transverse section of
just 1 of the ridges
of the ridged
band magnified. > > >

The dark dots are Meissner's corpuscles

The slightest distortion
of a Meissner's corpuscle will create sexual sensation.

UNCIRCUMCISED
Penis Derives Significant
Pleasure
BY
Thrusting to Stimulate the Thousands of
Touch-Sensitive
EROTIC Nerves
in its Upper Penis

Nature
intended the penis to derive high levels of sexual
pleasure from the thousands of touch
sensitive nerves in
its upper penis region.

PART 2:
Pleasure from
pressure-sensitive
nerves in the
TIP
of the
corpora cavernosum

The penis head (i.e.,
glans)
is not the most
erogenous tissue
on the penis. Nor is the
foreskin, nor its ridged band.

MOST erogenous tissue on the penis
is underneath
the
glansat the TIP of the
corpora cavernosum.

The
TIP
of
corpora cavernosum
is so extremely sensitive
that nature protects it
from direct touch by placing the
glans
over it. Cushioned, indirect
pressure is what the TIP needs,
the kind it receives from the
massaging actions of a pliable
glans,

and
from the
massaging actions of the
foreskin,
as it alternately bunches & un-bunches
against the coronal ridge.

The massaging actions of the
glans
and
foreskin,
during intercourse
thrusting, excite the
super-erotic,
pressure-sensitive nerves in
the TIP of the
corpora cavernosum,
that's located interiorly
beneath
the coronal ridge. (See pics
below.)

These
TIP nerves that are excited by the
application of a massaging-type
pressure (i.e, alternating
pressure and the release of
pressure) send a waves of sexual
excitement throughout the upper
penis, giving the uncircumcised man
exquisite pleasure and building
him to orgasm.

Therefore,
it's very, very
important that the
glans
not be compacted tightly against
the
corpora cavernosum TIP.

If the
erect penis
glans
presses tightly against the
ccTIP,
the sexual nerves in the
ccTIP
get too much constant direct
stimulation and they end up
sending out fewer pleasurable
sensations during intercourse, and
they may be even go completely
numb. (Women, similarly, can
experience numbness in their
clitoris if they apply too much
constant,
direct touch to it.)

REMOVAL OF THE FORESKIN CAN CAUSE
THE
cc
TIP
TO LOSE SEXUAL FEELING DURING
INTERCOURSE
AND EVEN GO NUMB

The
video in Reason
#5 explained that
circumcision removes 1/3 to 1/2 of
the penis's available shaft skin.
An insufficiency of shaft skin can
cause the erect circ penis tissue
to compact.

When the compacted circ
glans
presses down tightly on the
ccTIP,
the circ man experiences a
reduction in pleasurable feeling
in his upper penis during
intercourse thrusting. His
upper penis area can end up going
numb, or even worse, register
discomfort and/or pain.

This
reduction in pleasure coming from
the upper area causes the
circumcised penis to seek
pleasurable feelings elsewhere on
the penis. It, therefore, thrusts
to excite pressure-sensitive
nerves in its middle and lower
area. However, there are fewer
pressure-sensitive nerves in the
penis's middle and lower area, and
they are deeper inside the
corpora cavernosum
tissue, so they require strong,
hard thrusting against the vaginal
opening to excite them.

In
contrast, the upper penis nerves
of the uncircumcised penis create very
high levels of pleasure with very
little force. Thus, they only
need gentle, easy thrusting
motions to excite them.

Natural, uncircumcised sex is designed by nature
to be a gentler experience
for the woman.

Yes, it can now be said with
certainty: The
foreskin has
a purpose -- a
sexual purpose.
And during the intimacy of intercourse,
the foreskin not only makes a difference, a
superlative difference,in a man's sexual
pleasure, but its presence during intercourse
also makes a phenomenally greater difference
to the woman on the receiving end of the
penis, immensely enhancing her
pleasure and
comfort , and substantially increasing her
rate of orgasmic success.

Conversely: Circumcision
hasnewly-revealed, adverse
effectson the sexuality of both the man and his female
partner,
causing
profound detrimental consequences on the way
they experience intercourse,diminishing
their pleasure to an astounding degree.